Book review
Yael Reshef. Historical Continuity in the Emergence of Modern Hebrew. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2020. vii + 141 pp.
References (10)
References
Blanc, Haim. 1954. The Growth of Israeli Hebrew. Middle Eastern Affairs 51: 385–392.
Doron, Edit, Malka Rapoport Hovav, Yael Reshef & Moshe Taube. 2019. Introduction. Linguistic Contact, Continuity and Change in the Genesis of Modern Hebrew ed. by Edit Doron, Malka Rapoport Hovav, Yael Reshef & Moshe Taube, 1–31. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Eldar, Ilan. 2014. From Mendelssohn to Mendele: The Emergence of Modern Literary Hebrew. Jerusalem: Carmel.
Izre’el, Shlomo. 2002. The Emergence of Spoken Israeli Hebrew. Te’uda 181:217–238.
Izre’el, Shlomo (ed.). 2012. The Speech Machine as a Language Teacher: Hebrew Spoken Here. Tel Aviv: The Haim Rubin Tel Aviv University Press.
Rabin, Chaim. 1999. What Was the Revival of the Hebrew Language?. Linguistic Studies: Collected Papers in Hebrew and Semitic Languages ed. by Moshe Bar-Asher & Barak Dan, 359–376. Jerusalem: The Academy of the Hebrew Language and the Bialik Institute.
Ravid, Dorit & Avraham Avidor. 1998. Acquisition of Derived Nominals in Hebrew: Developmental and Linguistic Principles. Journal of Child Language 251:229–266.
Rosén, Haiim. 1992. Trifles about the Emergence of Israeli Hebrew, Societatis Linguisticae Europaeae Sodalicium Israelense: Studia 51:33–39.
Wexler, Paul. 1990. The Schizoid Nature of Modern Hebrew: A Slavic Language in Search of a Semitic Past. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.
Zuckermann, Ghil’ad. 2008. Israeli, a Beautiful Language. Tel-Aviv: Am Oved.